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One Man's Story of Drug Abuse.
To Anyone Who Will Listen
South Vietnam - 1966
Hey
man, you go down?, a voice whispered from across the doorway.
I was on
loan to The First Air Cav, Ankay, South Vietnam from a unit
that I had never reported to. It was my eighth day in country.
I was a small arms specialist and the guys were told I could
fix a weapon in the dark in seconds. A valuable person in this
"God Forsaken Place". I was processed in on my 21st birthday.
The voice
belonged to the dude from Spanish Harlem. I had played round
ball with him in a post game. He was the big dude from the other
team. They never played with a street kid from Philly before.
I smoked them and scored 28 points. We won by 10.
"What's
that, man?" I shot back. "You get down, man. I got some shit
in town I need to pick up. You got the jeep, man." "You need
a ride?", I said. "Yeah, man." "Jump in, We don't go on patrol
till 700 hours tomorrow." I went down for the first time. I
struggled to drive back to post. My entire body was consumed
by something I never felt before. It was 1966 and I had found
a way to tolerate my predicament.
Back in
the real world, 1967, I was now experienced with all kinds of
drugs. I was "Hip". I had learned how to deal with many things
in the previous two years but drugs was number one.
In 1968
and the "Summer of Love", I found myself in San Francisco, at
Haight and Asbury. The scene was all drugs. It was the first
time that I let a thought enter my mind that maybe this isn't
so good.
I met three
fifteen year-old kids who had run away from home in Utah to
be with their "brothers" in this crazy place. I wonder when
they died.
"Hey man,
follow me." Another voice from across a doorway. I followed
him downstairs and we sat in a small corner. He went into his
pocket and pulled out tin foil. In it he pulled out several
pills. "Purple barrels, man. Do one or two". I did both.
My life
went on a trip for several years. I knew there was something
wrong with what I was doing but I was angry and never dealt
with it. My anger, believe it or not, made me punish myself.
My first
real scare was Atlantic City, 1969. I ran into a fellow who
I had spent many summers with at the Jersey shore. "Hey, Larry!
Dude it's me, man". I knew Larry as well as a family member.
He turned and looked at me as if I wasn't there. I figured he
might be tripping so I'd be cool. He had his hair together,
you know long and all, he looked 'Hip'.
A person
came out of a nearby store and said to me, "He doesn't comprehend.
He's tripped out. He never came back. He was on a bad trip and
he's brain dead". I couldn't believe it but Larry was a vegetable.
Physically he was fine. Larry was one of the greatest athletes
I had ever known. Small but agile and he could do anything.
Larry was now all but a vegetable mumbling at people and cars
that passed.
At that
point in time I had done hundreds of LSD & Mescaline trips.
It shook me up. But it didn't stop me. I continued, as I couldn't
stop. I was "Hip". Drugs made me a very popular person I had
thought.
In the next
few years, I buried several best friends. Two were murdered
in a drug deal. Others overdosed or simply committed suicide.
By then even the hard-core drugys that I was tight with started
to one by one try to lose their bad habits. I always felt I
could walk away when ever I wanted to. I was wrong about that.
By now I
was broke, no job, no car, no place to live and worn out my
welcome at most places. My drugy friends were just as bad off.
Now, I was shooting Meth-Amphetamine at least five to six times
a day. I'd do Skag & Dalida just to get "straight".
It wasn't
any fun any more. I tried speed balls. Shooting speed in one
arm and smack in the other at the same time. It seemed like
it would bring the fun back. I nearly died. I was rushed to
the University of Pennsylvania Hospital where I met a man who
turned my life around.
He looked
at me and said, "Why are you so angry at yourself"? I had never
thought about it. He was right. I didn't like myself at all.
As a teen, I over-drank and did the most stupid things I could
find to do. I chose to travel with friends who were just like
me. Angry.
Hammer,
who was my favorite person to get high with, went into re-hab
and told me that he couldn't associate with me ever again. That
was a shock coming from him. I just buried him recently. He
got straight, thank God, but lost a battle to cancer.
My life
was in a shambles and my friends were either dead or in re-habs.
It was time for me to turn within. I started the long journey
of recovery and getting straight.
It was the
most painful and loneliest time of my life. I had no one but
God Himself. All the things that made me "Hip" were wrong. All
the things that I rejected for years were right. I had to face
that fact.
And all
the time I worked and worked to put myself back on track, I
heard that voice, "Hey, man, you go down". I had no idea what
that soldier was talking about when he said that to me. I pretended
I knew and ended up in a vicious circle of drugs and death.
I didn't have the courage to tell him to get lost. I wanted
to be Hip. I
would have saved myself, my family, my loved ones an enormous
amount of pain.
Although
I know my mind is damaged from the abuse and not what it could
be, I'm proud to be healthy, straight and alive on this side
of the grass. I will be fine. I now wish I had loved myself
enough to say, "NO".
By:
Somewhere HAPPY in the USA.
Thank you
"Happy" for sharing with Cool Nurse readers.
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